Peter And The Magic Thread

In honor of Easter coming up, I thought we’d share a short fable today :)

Let this be a story to marinate on over the weekend, and maybe even bookmark for the future. Hat tip to who I first heard this from, and ironically enough, almost exactly a year ago today!

The Magic Thread

In this French tale we read of Peter, a boy who is strong and able, yet sadly flawed by an attitude of impatience. Always dissatisfied with his present condition, Peter spends his life day-dreaming about the future.

One day while wandering in the forests, Peter meets a strange old woman who gives him a most tantalizing opportunity — the chance to skip the dull, mundane moments of life. She hands Peter a silver ball from which a tiny gold thread protrudes.

“This is your life thread,” she explains. “Do not touch it and time will pass normally. But if you wish time to pass more quickly, you have only to pull the thread a little way and an hour will pass like a second. But I warn you, once the thread has been pulled out, it cannot be pushed back in again.”

This magical thread seems the answer to all of Peter’s problems. It is just what he has always wanted. He takes the ball and runs home.

The following day in school Peter has his first opportunity to put the silver ball to use. The lesson is dragging, and the teacher scolds Peter for not concentrating. Peter fingers the silver ball and gives the thread a slight tug. Suddenly, the teacher dismisses the class, and Peter is free to leave school. He is overjoyed! How easy his life will now be.

From this moment, Peter begins to pull the thread a little every day.

But soon Peter begins to use the magic thread to rush through larger portions of life. Why waste time pulling the thread just a little every day when he can pull it hard and complete school altogether? He does so and finds himself out of school and apprenticed in trade. Peter uses the same technique to rush through his engagement to his sweetheart. He cannot bear and wait months to marry her so he uses the gold thread to hasten the arrival of the wedding day.

Peter continues to pattern throughout his life when hard, trying times come, he escapes then with his magic thread. But sadly when he comes to the end of his life, Peter realizes the emptiness of such an existence. By allowing impatience and discontentment to rule him, Peter has robbed himself of life’s riches moments and memories. With only the grave to look forward to, he deeply regrets ever having used the magic thread.

*****

Now this is the I found online, but it seems like had much happier endings. Like waking up from a bad dream, or getting the chance to do it all over again and start from the beginning :) Regardless, the point is one we’d be smart to heed:

QUIT TRYING TO ALWAYS SPEED UP LIFE!

Life can blow, but speeding it up also speeds up something else – death. Let tomorrow come on its own, as well as the next day, the next week, month, year – and if we should be so lucky – the next decade(s).

Use the weekend to slow down and be thankful for the one thing we all have right now – time. We’ll slip back into the rush again come Monday I’m sure, but for the moment let’s take a deep breath together and soak it in.

We’re alive! And it feels good!!

*****For similar reading, and a way to feel less jealous of others, go back to our post on whether or not you’d like to be Warren Buffett ;) You may instinctively scream “YES!,” but remember what else comes along with it – age. Are you really ready to be 86 right now?

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Peter And The Magic Thread was last modified: April 13th, 2017 by J. Money

“We’re alive! And it feels good!!” Sometimes I think of the opposing forces in my current journey of simplification and saving $. I have 5 kids, which seems to make all the goals much more difficult. However the goals really aren’t simplifying or saving $, the goal is really to enjoy life (which is the point of simplifying, etc.). There cannot be a much better way to enjoy life than to watch children! They constantly enjoy what we have forgot how to.

Great message for a Friday morning. It’s one of the big fears I have with the FIRE community. It’s very easy to fall into a trap of it’s all about when you retire and stop living your life. Just as in the proverb that would be a major mistake.

Great parable. I think about this a lot when it comes to our kids. Sometimes they can be challenging, and you wish that you could “fast-forward” to the years when they are older and (supposedly) more mature. Yet, then we take a step back and remember that good or bad these are the moments that we’ll cherish forever, and time will never give us back. It’s okay to look forward, but remember to embrace the little moments too.

Yup :) And you tend to forget all those terrible moments too and look back on it like they were cute little angels when that’s far from the truth, haha.. Or at least I do (my kids are almost 3 and 5 now and how i miss when i could hold them in my arms without them wiggling to get free!)

It’s important, on the journey to FI, not to get too caught up with the destination. The best way to enjoy life is by living in the present, and the more fun you have the faster time flies anyway. I don’t think I’d ever be pulling that thread, life is too short as it is :)

Poor Peter. I think we all go through those moments of wanting to press fast forward but it’s SO true that as you get older time flies so much faster! Some days I want a pause button!! :) On the road to FI, I see many talk about just wanting to get there (I do it too!) but the journey is as important as the destination. When you find yourself in one of those fast forward moments it’s helpful to remember the phrase “embrace the suck”…it will all fly by if you let it. Thanks for the reminder!!

I’ve had a busy week, with another coming up. I have plans Saturday to meet a friend who said she’ll drive to lunch & a wine tasting, but we’ve got no set time to be anywhere. Then Sunday is all for whatever happens (and probably laundry). I’m taking this weekend as a chance to enjoy. Thanks for the reminder. :)

This kind of reminds me an old Twilight Zone episode. If I remember correctly, the story goes something like this… this guy realizes that he can get anything he wants. Win a big poker pot? Done. Get the pretty girl? Yep. That raise at work? Sure thing. Then he starts to realize that life is almost tortuous to him because everything is so easy and he already knows that he will always win no matter what. At the end of the episode, he finally realizes that he is in hell. :)

Also, I would never want to be Warren Buffett… he seems rather boring. But Sir Richard Branson? He seems soooooo interesting.

This is a great reminder to focus on the journey – its so much more important than the destination. Throughout your journey you learn the lessons of life that make you who you are and get you where you want to go!

This makes me think the Adam Sandler movie was written based from Peter lol! The weather is nice this weekend, can’t wait to slow down, lay in the grass, and read a nice book from the library. #FrugalityAtItsFinest!

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I, J. Money, only claim the thoughts from my head. I am not a banker, CPA, money manager or anything else of that sort. Please seek a professional for any "real" advice. More info: privacy & disclosure page